I found Firefish which is a better alternative to the standard Mastodon application. It’s compatible with Mastodon and has better features. It allows users to create web pages and the character limit is 3,000 instead of the 500 on Mastodon. It feels like a good limit for the type of site that it is. Plus this means that it can handle long posts from users on customized Mastodon instances.

  • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Well, they’re both microblogging platforms that use ActivityPub to communicate with other websites.

      • chris@l.roofo.cc
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        1 year ago

        The userbase is not that important with activity pub. If the features are good they can grow slowly and still enjoy the whole fediverse. Of course it is important to have users at all. Otherwise it doesn’t make sense to put work on the software.

      • z3r0@lemmy.zip
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        1 year ago

        You assumed well. I’m in a Firefish instance and the most content I can see from there comes from Mastodon users from other instances.

        Don’t missunderstand me. I think that is pretty cool because you can interact with both Mastodon and Firefish users using any of the two applications, but at least in case of my Firefish instance, most of the additional features of Firefish are underutilized.

      • JonEFive
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        1 year ago

        Userbase may or may not be important to you as a user. Since they’re federated services, a Firefish user can follow and interact with a Mastodon user and vice versa. In terms of content alone, there’s effectively no difference. You can still subscribe, read, reply, favorite/star, retoot/boost, etc…

        However, a very popular software package in this sort of ecosystem will have the ability to set defacto standards. If Mastodon changes something in the way their software works that isn’t explicitly defined by the activitypub protocol, other software developers will have to choose whether or not to adopt and implement similar changes.

        They don’t have to, but they risk being seen as incompatible or not having a feature or behavior that users expect if they don’t. A great example of this are all the slight differences between Lemmy and Kbin. Kbin tries to do its own thing in some ways but some users expect feature parity with the larger Lemmy.

        I personally like Firefish (formerly Calckey) way more than Mastodon. I follow and interact with plenty of Mastodon accounts. Right now, it isn’t particularly important to me that the platforms aren’t exactly the same, the core activitypub based microblogging platform functionality gives me what I’m looking for.